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Chapter 5 The Standard Trade Model

Chapter 5 The Standard Trade Model. Prepared by Iordanis Petsas. To Accompany International Economics: Theory and Policy , Sixth Edition by Paul R. Krugman and Maurice Obstfeld. Chapter Organization. Introduction A Standard Model of a Trading Economy

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Chapter 5 The Standard Trade Model

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  1. Chapter 5 The Standard Trade Model Prepared by Iordanis Petsas To Accompany International Economics: Theory and Policy, Sixth Edition by Paul R. Krugman and Maurice Obstfeld

  2. Chapter Organization • Introduction • A Standard Model of a Trading Economy • International Transfers of Income: Shifting the RD Curve • Tariffs and Export Subsidies: Simultaneous Shifts in RS and RD • Summary • Appendix: Representing International Equilibrium with Offer Curves

  3. Introduction • Previous trade theories have emphasized specific sources of comparative advantage which give rise to international trade: • Differences in labor productivity (Ricardian model) • Differences in resources (specific factors model and Heckscher-Ohlin model) • The standard trade model is a general model of trade that admits these models as special cases.

  4. A Standard Model of a Trading Economy • The standard trade model is built on four key relationships: • Production possibility frontier and the relative supply curve • Relative prices and relative demand • World relative supply and world relative demand • Terms of trade and national welfare

  5. A Standard Model of a Trading Economy • Production Possibilities and Relative Supply • Assumptions of the model: • Each country produces two goods, food (F) and cloth (C) • Each country’s production possibility frontier is a smooth curve (TT) • The point on its production possibility frontier at which an economy actually produces depends on the price of cloth relative to food, PC/PF. • Isovalue lines • Lines along which the market value of output is constant

  6. Food production, QF Q TT Cloth production, QC A Standard Model of a Trading Economy Figure 5-1: Relative Prices Determine the Economy’s Output Isovalue lines

  7. A Standard Model of a Trading Economy Food production, QF Q1 VV1(PC/PF)1 Q2 Cloth production, QC Figure 5-2: How an Increase in the Relative Price of Cloth Affects Relative Supply VV2(PC/PF)2 TT

  8. A Standard Model of a Trading Economy • Relative Prices and Demand • The value of an economy's consumption equals the value of its production: PCQC+ PFQF = PCDC + PFDF = V • The economy’s choice of a point on the isovalue line depends on the tastes of its consumers, which can be represented graphically by a series of indifference curves.

  9. A Standard Model of a Trading Economy • Indifference curves • Each traces a set of combinations of cloth (C) and food (F) consumption that leave the individual equally well off • They have three properties: • Downward sloping • The farther up and to the right each lies, the higher the level of welfare to which it corresponds • Each gets flatter as we move to the right

  10. A Standard Model of a Trading Economy Food production, QF Food imports Q D TT Cloth production, QC Cloth exports Figure 5-3: Production, Consumption, and Trade in the Standard Model Indifference curves

  11. A Standard Model of a Trading Economy • If the relative price of cloth, PC/PF , increases, the economy’s consumption choice shifts from D1 to D2. • The move from D1 to D2 reflects two effects: • Income effect • Substitution effect • It is possible that the income effect will be so strong that when PC/PF rises, consumption of both goods actually rises, while the ratio of cloth consumption to food consumption falls.

  12. A Standard Model of a Trading Economy Food production, QF D2 D1 Q1 Q2 VV1(PC/PF)1 VV2(PC/PF)2 TT Cloth production, QC Figure 5-4: Effects of a Rise in the Relative Price of Cloth NOT! This shows an increase in the RDC, unlike the figure in the text.

  13. A Standard Model of a Trading Economy Food production, QF D2 D1 Q1 Q2 VV1(PC/PF)1 TT Cloth production, QC Figure 5-4: Effects of a Rise in the Relative Price of Cloth This shows a decrease in the RDC, as does the figure in the text. VV2(PC/PF)2

  14. A Standard Model of a Trading Economy Food production, QF D2 D1 D3 Q1 Q2 VV1(PC/PF)1 VV3(PC/PF)1 TT Cloth production, QC Figure 5-4: Effects of a Rise in the Relative Price of Cloth The income effect is shown by the move from D1 to D3. The substitution effect is shown as D3 to D2. VV2(PC/PF)2

  15. A Standard Model of a Trading Economy • The Welfare Effect of Changes in the Terms of Trade • Terms of trade • The price of the good a country initially exports divided by the price of the good it initially imports. • A rise in the terms of trade increases a country’s welfare, while a decline in the terms of trade reduces its welfare.

  16. A Standard Model of a Trading Economy • Determining Relative Prices • Suppose that the world economy consists of two countries: • Home (which exports cloth) • Its terms of trade are measured by PC/PF • Itsquantities of cloth and food producedare QCand QF • Foreign (which exports food) • Its terms of trade are measured by PF/PC • Itsquantities of cloth and food producedare Q*Cand Q*F

  17. A Standard Model of a Trading Economy • To determine PC/PF , one must find the intersection of world relative supply of cloth and world relative demand. • The world relative supply curve (RS) is upward sloping because an increase in PC/PF leads both countries to produce more cloth and less food. • The world relative demand curve (RD) is downward sloping because an increase in PC/PF leads both countries to shift their consumption mix away from cloth toward food.

  18. A Standard Model of a Trading Economy Relative price of cloth, PC/PF RS Relative quantity of cloth, QC + Q*C QF + Q*F 1 (PC/PF)1 RD Figure 5-5: World Relative Supply and Demand

  19. A Standard Model of a Trading Economy • Economic Growth: A Shift of the RS Curve • Is economic growth in other countries good or bad for our nation? • It may be good for our nation because it means larger markets for our exports. • It may mean increased competition for our exporters. • Is growth in a country more or less valuable when that nation is part of a closely integrated world economy? • It should be more valuable when a country can sell some of its increased production to the world market. • It is less valuable when the benefits of growth are passed on to foreigners rather than retained at home.

  20. A Standard Model of a Trading Economy • Growth and the Production Possibility Frontier • Economic growth implies an outward shift of a country’s production possibility frontier (TT). • Biased growth • Takes placewhen TT shifts out more in one direction than in the other • Can occur for two reasons: • Technological progress in one sector of the economy • Increase in a country’s supply of a factor of production

  21. A Standard Model of a Trading Economy Food production, QF Food production, QF TT1 TT1 TT2 TT2 Cloth production, QC Cloth production, QC (a) Growth biased toward cloth (b) Growth biased toward food Figure 5-6: Biased Growth

  22. A Standard Model of a Trading Economy • Relative Supply and the Terms of Trade • Export-biased growth • Disproportionately expands a country’s production possibilities in the direction of the good it exports • Worsens a growing country’s terms of trade, to the benefit of the rest of the world • Import-biased growth • Disproportionately expands a country’s production possibilities in the direction of the good it imports • Improves a growing country’s terms of trade at the rest of the world’s expense

  23. A Standard Model of a Trading Economy Relative price of cloth, PC/PF Relative price of cloth, PC/PF RS1 RS2 RS1 RS2 2 (PC/PF)2 (PC/PF)1 1 2 1 (PC/PF)1 (PC/PF)2 RD RD Relative quantity of cloth, QC + Q*C QF + Q*F Relative quantity of cloth, QC + Q*C QF + Q*F Figure 5-7: Growth and Relative Supply (a) Cloth-biased growth (b) Food-biased growth

  24. A Standard Model of a Trading Economy • International Effects of Growth • Export-biased growth in the rest of the world improves our terms of trade, while import-biased growth abroad worsens our terms of trade. • Export-biased growth in our country worsens our terms of trade, reducing the direct benefits of growth, while import-biased growth leads to an improvement of our terms of trade.

  25. A Standard Model of a Trading Economy • Immiserizing growth • A situation where export-biased growth by poor nations can worsen their terms of trade so much that they would be worse off than if they had not grown at all • It can occur under extreme conditions: Strongly export-biased growth must be combined with very steep RS and RD curves. • It is regarded by most economists as more a theoretical point than a real-world issue.

  26. A Standard Model of a Trading Economy Table 5-1: Average Annual Percent Changes in Terms of Trade

  27. International Transfers of Income: Shifting the RD Curve • International transfers of income, such as war reparations and foreign aid, may affect a country’s terms of trade by shifting the world relative demand curve. • Relative world demand for goods may shift because of: • Changes in tastes • Changes in technology • International transfers of income • The Transfer Problem • How international transfers affect the terms of trade

  28. International Transfers of Income: Shifting the RD Curve • Effects of a Transfer on the Terms of Trade • When both countries allocate their change in spending in the same proportions (Ohlin’s point): • The RD curve will not shift, and there will be no terms of trade effect. • When the two countries do not allocate their change in spending in the same proportions (Keynes’s point): • The RD curve will shift and there will be a terms of trade effect. • The direction of the effect on terms of trade will depend on the difference in Home and Foreign spending patterns.

  29. International Transfers of Income: Shifting the RD Curve Relative price of cloth, PC/PF RS (PC/PF)1 1 2 (PC/PF)2 RD1 RD2 Relative quantity of cloth, QC + Q*C QF + Q*F Figure 5-8: Effects of a Transfer on the Terms of Trade

  30. International Transfers of Income: Shifting the RD Curve • Presumptions about the Terms of Trade Effects of Transfers • A transfer will worsen the donor’s terms of trade if the donor has a higher marginal propensity to spend on its export good than the recipient. • In practice, most countries spend a much higher share of their income on domestically produced goods than foreigners do. • This is not necessarily due to differences in taste but rather to barriers to trade, natural and artificial.

  31. Tariffs and Export Subsidies: Simultaneous Shifts in RS and RD • Import tariffs and export subsidies affect both relative supply and relative demand. • Relative Demand and Supply Effects of a Tariff • Tariffs drive a wedge between the prices at which goods are traded internationally (external prices)andthe prices at which they are traded within a country (internal prices). • The terms of trade correspond to external, not internal, prices.

  32. Tariffs and Export Subsidies: Simultaneous Shifts in RS and RD • Effects of an Import Tariff • Example: Suppose that Home imposes a 20% tariff on its imports of food (and that Home is a large country): • This will raise Home’s internal PF/PC by 20% over the external PF/PC • Home’s internal PC/PF 20% < world PC/PF • RS shifts left as Home’s QF increases and QC decreases. • RD shifts right as Home’s DF decreases and DC increases. • A Home import tariff improves Home’s terms of trade and worsens Foreign’s.

  33. Relative price of cloth, PC/PF RS2 RS1 1 (PC/PF)1 2 (PC/PF)2 RD2 RD1 Relative quantity of cloth, QC + Q*C QF + Q*F Tariffs and Export Subsidies: Simultaneous Shifts in RS and RD Figure 5-9: Effects of a Tariff on the Terms of Trade

  34. Tariffs and Export Subsidies: Simultaneous Shifts in RS and RD • Effects of an Export Subsidy • Tariffs and export subsidies are often treated as similar policies but they have opposite effects on the terms of trade. • Example: Suppose that Home offers 20% subsidy on the value of cloth exported: • This will make Home’s internal PC/PF 20% > world PC/PF. • RS shifts right as Home’s QC increases and QF decreases. • RD shifts left as Home’s DC decreases and DF increases. • A Home export subsidy worsens Home’s terms of trade and improves Foreign’s.

  35. Relative price of cloth, PC/PF RS2 RS1 1 (PC/PF)1 2 (PC/PF)2 RD1 Relative quantity of cloth, QC + Q*C QF + Q*F Tariffs and Export Subsidies: Simultaneous Shifts in RS and RD Figure 5-10: Effects of a Subsidy on the Terms of Trade RD2

  36. Tariffs and Export Subsidies: Simultaneous Shifts in RS and RD • Implications of Terms of Trade Effects: Who Gains and Who Loses? • The International Distribution of Income • If Home (a large country) imposes a tariff, its welfare increases as long as the tariff is not too large, while Foreign’s welfare decreases. • If Home offers an export subsidy, its welfare deteriorates, while Foreign’s welfare increases. • The Distribution of Income Within Countries • A tariff (subsidy) has the direct effect of raising the internal relative price of the imported (exported) good. • Tariffs and export subsidies might have perverse effects on internal prices (Metzler paradox).

  37. Tariffs and Export Subsidies: Simultaneous Shifts in RS and RD • Metzler Paradox: • The International Distribution of Income • Terms of trade (ToT) effect so large that a tariff might lower the internal price of the imported good. (Tariff improves ToT.) • An export subsidy might lower the ToT so much that the internal price of the export good falls.

  38. Summary • The standard trade model provides a framework that can be used to address a wide range of international issues and admits previous trade models as special cases. • A country’s terms of trade are determined by the intersection of the world relative supply and demand curves. • Economic growth is usually biased. Growth that is export-biased (import-biased) worsens (improves) the terms of trade.

  39. Summary • International transfers of income may affect a country’s terms of trade, depending if they shift the world relative demand curve. • Import tariffs and export subsidies affect both relative supply and demand. • The terms of trade effects of an export subsidy hurt the exporting country and benefit the rest of the world, while those of a tariff do the reverse. • Both trade instruments have strong income distribution effects within countries.

  40. Appendix: Representing International Equilibrium with Offer Curves Home’s imports, DF - QF Desired imports of food T PC/PF O Desired exports of cloth Home’s exports, QC - DC Figure 5A-1: Home’s Desired Trade at a Given Relative Price

  41. Appendix: Representing International Equilibrium with Offer Curves Home’s imports, DF - QF C T2 T1 O Home’s exports, QC - DC Figure 5A-2: Home’s Offer Curve

  42. Appendix: Representing International Equilibrium with Offer Curves Foreign’s exports, Q*F – D*F F O Foreign’s imports, D*C – Q*C Figure 5A-3: Foreign’s Offer Curve

  43. Appendix: Representing International Equilibrium with Offer Curves Home’s imports of food, DF– QF Foreign’s exports of cloth, Q*F – D*F C F E Y O X Home’s exports of cloth, QC – DC Foreign’s imports of cloth, D*C – Q*C Figure 5A-4: Offer Curve Equilibrium

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